Historical Irish Corpus
1600 - 1926

Notes on last Number.

Title
Notes on last Number.
Author(s)
Ní fios,
Compiler/Editor
Laoide, Seosamh (Lloyd, Joseph H.)
Composition Date
1902
Publisher
Connradh na Gaedhilge

Search Texts

Poetry/Prose
1600 1926




L. 140


NOTES ON LAST NUMBER



"Is giorra
'dhuine cabhair Dé 'ná an doras,".



"Tá a spuir féin agus capall dhuine eile aige."



"Dhéanfá gaisge ar chorcán praisce".



IRISH WORDS AT Feis Laighean agus Midhe, 1901.



Bardóga becomes páirdeóga in Donegal.
Buailtín, same in North; buailteán in Kerry.
Buachallán, see Proverb No. 62. This is known to
Kerrymen as geósadán.
Camreilge, also cosreilge, club-foot.
Criochán is a small potato, in Kerry cadhrán, a small
bit of hard turf cadhfran, North.



Crúistin is a mixture : Crust-ing. Crústáil is
the better form. I heard the word in a humourous
song, An Tisile Bhuidhe - a hen that someone killed:
"An té chrústaigh gan chúis mo Thisile Bhuidhe." [tSisile,
Shisile?].
Colapán is colpa, and in Scotland lurga
Dubhacáin is, I think, deócán, a reed for playing
made of green stalk of wheat or oats, agus c.



Earrais may be from iris, the straw handle of a
cliabh, called muic-iris in Kerry.
Failleog was féithleog, a sinew, gristle, I think
from féith. See Fr. O'Leary's Aesop III., p. 38, féith-
leach.



Gríseach is gríosach in Kerry, and feac a spade-
handle; a little half-worn spade was ciopóg.



Poc: Poc-anáirde, a high puck given to the slither
or ball with the camán (hurley); also applied to a
fairy stroke supposed to cause those sores in the leg
which often lead to contraction of the limb; "Cad
'tá air? Ó, fuair sé poc."



AN TOBAR DRAOIDHEACHTA.



Ní ghéillim le d'bharamhail-se gur fearr Creideamh
agus Gorta 'ná An Tobar Draoidheachta. Is dóigh liom-sa
gurab é seo an leabhar is deise, is fearr agus is Gaodhal-
aighe a tháinig ó láimh an Athar Uí Dhuinnín fós. Níl
agat acht an dá leabhar an léigheadh os comhair aon-ne
go bhfuil cluas Ghaodhalach air agus beidh fhios agat ciaca
is feárr.



Séamus Ua Dubhghaill.



19 Dawson Street, Dublin 2
D02 HH58 +353 1 676 2570 info@ria.ie
Royal Irish Academy
Cookie Use
Website developed by Niall O'Leary Services